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Chemonastic Stalked Glands in the Carnivorous Rainbow Plant Byblis gigantea LINDL. (Byblidaceae, Lamiales)

Poppinga, Simon ; Knorr, Noah ; Ruppert, Sebastian ; Speck, Thomas (2023)
Chemonastic Stalked Glands in the Carnivorous Rainbow Plant Byblis gigantea LINDL. (Byblidaceae, Lamiales).
In: International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2022, 23 (19)
doi: 10.26083/tuprints-00022496
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Item Type: Article
Type of entry: Secondary publication
Title: Chemonastic Stalked Glands in the Carnivorous Rainbow Plant Byblis gigantea LINDL. (Byblidaceae, Lamiales)
Language: English
Date: 28 November 2023
Place of Publication: Darmstadt
Year of primary publication: 2022
Place of primary publication: Basel
Publisher: MDPI
Journal or Publication Title: International Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume of the journal: 23
Issue Number: 19
Collation: 25 Seiten
DOI: 10.26083/tuprints-00022496
Corresponding Links:
Origin: Secondary publication DeepGreen
Abstract:

Carnivorous rainbow plants (Byblis, Byblidaceae, Lamiales) possess sticky flypaper traps for the capture, retention, and digestion of prey (mainly small insects). The trapping system is based on a multitude of millimeter-sized glandular trichomes (also termed stalked glands), which produce adhesive glue drops. For over a century, the trapping system of Byblis was considered passive, meaning that no plant movement is involved. Recently, a remarkable discovery was made: the stalked glands of Byblis are indeed capable of reacting to chemical (protein) stimuli with slow movement responses. This prompted us to investigate this phenomenon further with a series of experiments on the stimulation, kinematics, actuation, and functional morphology of the stalked glands of cultivated Byblis gigantea plants. Measured stalked gland lengths and densities on the trap leaves are similar to the data from the literature. Motion reactions could only be triggered with chemical stimuli, corroborating the prior study on the stalked gland sensitivity. Reaction time (i.e., time from stimulation until the onset of motion) and movement duration are temperature-dependent, which hints towards a tight physiological control of the involved processes. The stalked gland movement, which consist of a sequence of twisting and kinking motions, is rendered possible by the components of the stalk cell wall and is furthermore anatomically and mechanically predetermined by the orientation of cellulose microfibrils in the cell wall. Successive water displacement processes from the stalk cell into the basal cells actuate the movement. The same kinematics could be observed in stalked glands drying in air or submersed in a saturated salt solution. Stimulated and dried stalked glands as well as those from the hypertonic medium were capable of regaining their initial shape by rehydration in water. However, no glue production could be observed afterwards. The long-time overlooked chemonastic movements of stalked glands may help Byblis to retain and digest its prey; however, further research is needed to shed light on the ecological characteristics of the rainbow plant’s trapping system.

Uncontrolled Keywords: biomechanics, carnivory, functional morphology, prey capture, trichome
Identification Number: 11514
Status: Publisher's Version
URN: urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-224969
Additional Information:

This article belongs to the Special Issue Carnivorous Plant Biology: From Gene to Traps

Classification DDC: 500 Science and mathematics > 570 Life sciences, biology
500 Science and mathematics > 580 Plants (botany)
Divisions: 10 Department of Biology > Botanischer Garten
Date Deposited: 28 Nov 2023 13:44
Last Modified: 08 Jan 2024 08:28
SWORD Depositor: Deep Green
URI: https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/id/eprint/22496
PPN: 514479086
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